Archive for the ‘Indian’ category

IPF veterans meet over rumours of merger with MIC

June 14th, 2007
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IPF veterans meet over rumours of merger with MIC

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Pandithan says he will answer all questions on the rumours of a merger with MIC at the IPF national conference on July 1.
Pandithan says he will answer all questions on the rumours of a merger with MIC at the IPF national conference on July 1.

KUALA LUMPUR: A group of Indian Progressive Front veterans and former members met on Sunday in what was billed as an effort to save the party.

The meeting came in the wake of rumours that its president Tan Sri M.G. Pandithan was planning a merger with the Malaysian Indian Congress.

Pandithan was sacked as the MIC vice-president by party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu about 20 years ago.

He went on to set up the IPF, but the two men appeared to have left that episode behind.

His presence at the MIC general assembly recently has exacerbated the concerns of some of his followers.
About 50 of them, including party loyalists and some of those who were sacked from the MIC together with Pandithan in 1988, passed a resolution at the Sunday meeting calling on him to leave the party.

The IPF’s former secretary-general K. Panjamurti said it would be unfair if the party was to be dissolved because of Pandithan’s personal interest and asked him to leave gracefully if he wanted to join the MIC.

Panjamurti said he had confronted Pandithan, but the latter had denied he was planning anything.

"We are still concerned and worried," Panjamurti said.

"Many branches have been closed down. All the 57 branches in Perak have been dissolved as a result of Pandithan’s failure to submit their accounts for years. Now we don’t know how many branches are still registered."

Panjamurti was one of the 13 supporters of Pandithan who was sacked from the MIC.

M. Kanagasabai, who said he was the founding president of the party in 1990, said almost 90 per cent of the people who originally supported Pandithan had left the party over the years as they were unhappy with his leadership and administration.

"The last straw came when he became friendly with Samy Vellu. He wants to patch up and ditch us, which is okay, but to dissolve the party is terrible. We will not accept it," he said.

Sunday’s meeting also asked Panjamurti to lead the party.

"We will announce this at our annual general meeting on June 24," Panjamurti said.

Pandithan dismissed the allegations against him.

"Anyone can say anything. I cannot be responding to everything they say. Furthermore, these people are no longer in the party. They left 10 to 15 years ago," he said.

Asked about the possibility of the IPF being dissolved and a merger with MIC, Pandithan laughed and said he would announce his decision at the party’s national conference on July 1.

"I will answer all questions there."

Loga – a seeker who will be deeply missed

June 11th, 2007
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A seeker who will be deeply missed
M. Nasir says he and Loga were good friends who spent hours just talking and discussing matters of life
M. Nasir says he and Loga were good friends who spent hours just talking and discussing matters of life

THE Alleycats, famous for its classic pop Malay numbers, contributed much to the development of the local music scene.

Francissca Peters says Loga and the other Alleycats were God-gifted performers for whom she has great respect
Francissca Peters says Loga and the other Alleycats were God-gifted performers for whom she has great respect

So when founding member Loganathan Arumugam died after a year-long battle with lung cancer, other celebrated artistes took a stroll down memory lane.

Singer Francissca Peters said Loga and the rest of the Alleycats were God-gifted performers for whom she had great respect.

"I have known both brothers for almost 25 years now. They were soul-mates. Loga’s loss must have greatly affected David. I have no words to console him.

"Loga was a charming and witty man. Can you imagine what kind of man he was with that deadly combination?
"If he had been younger, girls would have gone ga-ga over him."

He was a highly-talented, gifted and intellectual man, a combination that she said only a few artistes today possessed.

"Beneath his quietness, there was this great sense of humour and warmth that many people did not realise."

Composer M. Nasir said he had known Loga for almost 30 years; they were good friends who spent hours just talking and discussing matters of life.

"He was a beautiful person, in a poetic sense.

"I think of him as a ‘pencari’, someone who was always searching for something in life. I will miss him deeply."

Nasir co-produced the Alleycats first Malay album, Terima Kasih, in 1978.

Musician Ramli M.S. said he knew Loga for almost a decade.

He described his friend as "a good man", a happy-go-lucky person to whom people could easily relate and whose Afro hairdo was the first thing that came to mind when anyone mentioned his name.

"The Alleycats must go on, it should not stop here. David is still here," he said.

The vocalist and flute player died smiling as he listened to early Alleycats songs on a portable disc player placed by his bedside at Mount Miriam Hospital, Penang.

Alleycats – The immense staying power of sheer talent

June 11th, 2007
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The immense staying power of sheer talent

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The Alleycats line-up during the 1980s.
The Alleycats line-up during the 1980s.

THEY gave us evergreen hits like Sampaikan Salam, Sekuntum Mawar Merah, Hingga Akhir Nanti and a host of other chart-busters.

But they were also loved for their mean covers of favourite pop numbers and rock ballads, ranging from songs by The Beatles and Deep Purple to more recent Robbie Williams and Maroon 5 hits.

This versatility and ability to keep up with the times earned the Alleycats a huge fan base keeping them timeless. Afro-haired brothers David and Loganathan Arumugam were instrumental in the band’s popularity.

David’s first band was called the Super Jets. The six-piece band was a hit with the American soldiers on leave in Penang from the war in Vietnam. About this time, David and Super Jets drummer Albert Choo were also trying to form a new band.

David quit school mid-way through Form 5 and formed the Alleycats with Loga and another brother Shanmugam, who played lead guitar, Khoo Eng An aka Johnson Khoo (rhythm guitar), Silly Hock (bass) and Choo on drums.
But David felt the new band was still not ready to perform in public, and formed another group called The Beads which entered the inaugural 1969 Radio Malaysia Talentime contest.

The Beads won the Talentime for the Penang Zone and went on to compete in the North Zone championship. It clinched that too and went to Kuala Lumpur for the finals.

The Super Jets had disbanded by then and The Beads and Alleycats decided to merge.

The group clicked well, and moved to Kuala Lumpur in 1970 to try their luck there. They managed to secure a three-year contract at the Tin Mine Discotheque at the KL Hilton, which is now the Mutiara Hotel Kuala Lumpur.

In 1973, they started playing in Singapore and for the next three years, the Alleycats shuttled between Penang, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore.

Then they hit Hong Kong, first playing at The Memory Disco and later at The Club Capital. It turned into a nine-year stint.

Their first English album, called Alleycats, released in 1978, did not do so well.

But their first Malay album, Penyanyi, recorded almost the same time, did.

The following year, they recorded another Malay album, called Terima Kasih, and on it was Senandung Semalam, which propelled them to stardom.

They were still in Hong Kong, unaware of their huge popularity back home in Malaysia.

Their watershed year was 1980. Hingga Akhir Nanti from the band’s fifth album became a huge hit.

But it was not until two years later that they performed at their first major concert at Stadium Negara in Kuala Lumpur to thousands of fans.

The rest, as they say, is history. The band went on to record 29 albums. The latest one, Rasa, is yet to be released.

The group had several changes in its line-up. Nevertheless, the two core members of David and Loga stayed on.

With Loga’s death, David is the sole remaining original member of the Alleycats.

UPSR 7As Priya gets home

June 7th, 2007
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New home, a brighter future

Rizalman Hammim

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M. Priyaranjini and her family thanking Datuk T. Rajagopal (right) for their new home.
M. Priyaranjini and her family thanking Datuk T. Rajagopal (right) for their new home.

SEREMBAN: She had to study under the streetlights because her family’s squatter house did not have electricity.

Another kid might have used that as an excuse for doing badly in school but not M. Priyaranjini.

"There was no electricity at our squatter house and I was forced to study under the nearby streetlights but I was determined to succeed in my studies so that I can help take care of my family," she said.

Priyaranjini’s determination paid off when she scored 7As in the 2005 Ujian Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah (UPSR) and emerged as her school’s top student.

Her success in the face of adversity did not go unnoticed.
Touched by her determination, radio station, THR Raaga, organised a fund-raising initiative to provide a better and more comfortable home for Priyaranjini and her family.

The six-month initiative, which was launched in November 2005, managed to raise RM33,800 in donations.

The money was put into a trust fund and was subsequently used to buy a low-cost apartment in Seremban 2.

Yesterday, Priyaranjini, her mother M. Sumathi and her four siblings, aged between 5 and 13, received the keys to their new home from state Unity, Consumer Affairs, Plantations and Commodity executive committee chairman Datuk T. Rajagopal.

The windfall comes as a great relief for the family as their plight had worsened considerably since Priyaranjini’s father A. Muthusamy died of heart failure last year.

"I can now concentrate on my studies. Now, I can live comfortably with my family," said the excited 14-year-old who is now a Form Two student at SMK King George V.

The single-minded girl has already set a target of scoring 8As in the Penilaian Menengah Rendah examination next year.

Rajagopal, who is also the state MIC chairman, thanked THR Raaga and the Malaysian public for helping to raise the funds.

"I would also like to thank RB Land Sdn Bhd for everything they did to make this possible, including giving a discount on the apartment. Besides the apartment, we also bought a computer for Priyaranjini with the funds raised," Rajagopal said.

He said the MIC would continue to monitor and support Priyaranjini and her siblings in their studies and would provide them with books and equipment to ensure that they succeed in their studies.

Alleycats Loga’s Demise

June 7th, 2007
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Website to keep Loga’s memory, songs alive

By NIK KHUSAIRI IBRAHIM
 

PENANG: Fans of Alleycats came from as far as Singapore to join hundreds of mourners in paying their last respects to Loganathan Arumugam. 

Final rites: Vigneshwaran saying prayers as the coffin bearing his father's remains is pushed into the incinerator at the Batu Lanchang crematorium in Penang yesterday.

A. Prakash and his friend rushed to Penang from Singapore on Monday on learning that Loga, as he was popularly known, had died of lung cancer. 

“We have been here for three days to pay our respects to a legend. We are proud of his achievements.  

“We will set up a website to keep his memory and songs alive,” said Prakash, 35. 

Loga was cremated at the Batu Lanchang crematorium at 11am yesterday. 

Fans and well-wishers were at the family house in Jalan Azyze in Tanjung Bungah as early as 8.30am. 

Also present were popular singer Datuk D.J. Dave, former Miss Malaysia and radio deejay Yasmin Yusoff and comedian Accapan. 

Loga’s only son Vigneshwaran and relatives led the funeral ceremony according to Hindu rites at 10.15am. Loga, 54, also left behind wife Susan and daughter Priyadashini. 

Mega Fortune Bikers Club convoy of big bikers escorted the cortege to the crematorium. 

Persatuan Karyawan president Freddie Fernandez said Loga was among the very few Indians who had become a national icon. 

“Loga was not only active in music. He was also very active in Karyawan,” he said. 

PBA Holdings Bhd chief executive officer Jaseni Maidinsa said he had known Loga since the 1960s. 

“I was 13 years old then. We became close friends. Love for music bound us together,” he said, adding that Loga was the brains behind Alleycats. 

“Alleycats started singing at Carmens,” he said. 

“After Tan Sri P. Ramlee, I can't think of other big names in the entertainment industry who could bridge the racial barrier except Alleycats,” he said. 

Last journey: Priyadashini carrying a clay pot during Loga’s funeral yesterday. With her is her mother Susan (right).